Peace for the World

Peace for the World
First democratic leader of Justice the Godfather of the Sri Lankan Tamil Struggle: Honourable Samuel James Veluppillai Chelvanayakam

Saturday, July 23, 2016

Most effective group that represents people in Parliament is the JVP - Survey


FRIDAY, 22 JULY 2016
A survey carried out by www.manthri.lk web site states the group of JVP Parliamentarians is the most effective group of MPs in Parliament that acts according to people’s wishes.
The web sites collects data regarding the manner MPs carry out their affairs in Parliament daily and five JVP Parliamentarians out of the six in Parliament have been selected among the ten most active MPs in Parliament.  The top place has been received by the JVP Leader Anura Dissanayaka who has participated in Parliamentary debates 188 times under 13 topics. The second place goes to the Chairman of COPE JVP Parliamentarian Sunil Handunneththi.
UNP Parliamentarian Buddhika Pathirana is placed third while UNP Leader Prime Minister Ranil Wickremesinghe is placed fourth and JVP Parliamentarian Dr.  Nalinda Jayathissa is placed fifth in the list.
The UPFA Parliamentarian Dinesh Gunawardene is at the sixth position, Minister of Finance Ravi Karunanayaka is at the seventh position and JVP Parliamentarian Vijitha Herath is at the eighth position. The Minister of Mass Media Gayantha Karunarathna is at the ninth position while the tenth place is taken by JVP Parliamentarian Bimal Rathnayaka.
According to the website the most active new MP in Parliament is JVP Parliamentarian Dr. Nalinda Jayathissa.
Apple CEO Tim Cook at Apple’s office in Ireland. Apple has publicly stated that it wants to significantly expand its operations in Ireland

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Untitled-1Friday, 22 July 2016

Many foreign investors I engage with want Sri Lanka to emulate Ireland, or even Vietnam, because they tell me the attractiveness of a country to foreign investors and the feasibility of individual investment projects is not only linked to a country’s policy environment. According to them, the practical administrative implementation of these policies are far more important to attract investment.

It is no secret that our administrative procedures pose serious obstructions even with our apparently quite liberal investment environment. Many investors openly complain about the difficulties even after the introduction of broad liberalisation measures with respect to Foreign Direct Investment (FDI).

What frequently happens is that broad policy reforms do not actually translate into improvements in the various bureaucratic processes investors have to go through. Therefore before the Government starts signing FTAs, it would be wise to seriously look at setting up a one-stop agency to support Sri Lanka’s trade and investments needs.

Untitled-2The one-stop shop, which can be called Trade Invest Sri Lanka, must have the teeth to provide support to Sri Lankan and foreign businesses doing business as outlined in our policy framework. Trade Invest Sri Lanka must bring together all support programmes including incentives in order to build strong partnerships with business.

We need to look at an approach of having trade which is driven by investment, not only relying on MOUs and FTAs. Like Ireland, we need to build on our investment capacity and promote trade through investment. We already have a number of MNC companies which are some of the largest investors in other parts of the world, and therefore we need to drive an investment-led trade initiative.

Investor experience

Most investment promotion activities by themselves are not sufficient to attract investors to the country. In fact, such an approach can easily boomerang.

A good marketing and public relations effort might well result in a strong response from abroad, with many interested investors visiting the country to explore it first hand as a potential investment location. But in situations where administrative structures pose a serious problem, potential investors are likely to find out fast and move to another country.

Experiences with obtaining visas and entering a country might be taken as a first signal. Indications and opinions of existing investors who incurred unnecessary costs and losses due to delays resulting from actions – or a lack of action – by government agencies will leave lasting imprints. Should it turn out that administrative practices do pose a serious problem, potential investors are very likely to walk away, not to return as the country will be seen as not being investor-friendly.

It is not that investors just essentially dislike government rules and regulations any investor has to follow. In fact, they are used to dealing with government administration procedures in their home countries and other countries they have invested. They also do not expect that all these procedures will always be straightforward and work seamlessly. But they will be allergic to discretionary behaviour and unpredictability with respect to obtaining approvals. Especially when they recognise that the success of their venture will to a large degree depend on paying kickbacks or relying on personal relations with ministers and well-connected individuals, serious investors will think twice before committing their money.

All this means is that the Government cannot simply rely on the policy environment to attract investments. The practical implications are far more important for investors. By advertising the country through road shows as an attractive investment location, the credibility rests with the satisfaction of their potential investors and existing investors. Should investors find that their expectations are not fulfilled, they will often feel betrayed and lose trust in the country.

Recognising that existing administrative practices pose a threat to their policy reform efforts, the Government needs to find practical solutions to creating a more attractive business environment. The BOI, being the point of first contact and gate of entry for foreign investors, ideally would be the most appropriate agency to tackle these issues.

During the mid-1980s, the concept of a ‘One-Stop Shop’ (OSS) came into fashion as a vehicle to deal with administrative barriers to provide a more streamlined and investor-friendly policy environment. However, the experience with the OSS concept for Sri Lanka is chequered and not particularly helpful in some instances.

The One-Stop Shop (OSS)

When trying to establish an investment project and making it operational, investors tend to face a number of steps where they need to interact with various Government agencies to obtain all the necessary permits, licenses, approvals and clearances. In short, an investor coming into Sri Lanka has to be in contact with a number of different Government and local authorities to go through their administrative procedures before the operations can begin. Some have even struggled for over two years. A delay can only translate into additional costs and foregone revenue, and any permit, approval or clearance not forthcoming can jeopardise the entire project.

Given the complexity of this process, the concept of an OSS seems still very attractive. The basic idea is that an investor would only have to be in contact with one single entity to obtain all the necessary paperwork in one rationalised and coordinated process, rather than having to go through a maze of different Government bodies.

In practice, an OSS would effectively mean that one Government agency has all the power necessary to grant the various licenses, permits, approvals and clearances. Without such an all-embracing authority, the agency could in fact not wield much control over the process. It could therefore not actually provide all the necessary clearances at various stages of the administrative process, having to depend on other agencies instead.

Politically feasible 

Today what is more relevant is whether a high-powered OSS is politically feasible. The other question is whether a single agency should actually have this much authority and power.

It is important to recognise that most agencies and administrative processes were created in response to policy concerns of the Government. Be it concerns related to policy, immigration, environmental, tax incentives or health and safety problems, each agency tries to address a particular issue with specialised staff and processes.

Any OSS that wants to give sanctions in any of these areas would in fact have to re-build these (or similar) structures in-house. Otherwise approvals such as tax incentives, environmental impact assessments, or health and safety certificates would most likely not meet the underlying policy objectives.

But such a mirroring of administrative capabilities would quickly turn an OSS into a Governmental super-agency with massive staff and resource requirements. It is unlikely that any such agency would be capable of providing fast and client-oriented services to the private sector. Governments therefore typically shy away from establishing such an OSS in the narrow sense. Instead they tend to rely on some form of coordination mechanism where the various authorities maintain their existing mandates and responsibilities.

The typical structure of such a coordinating mechanism consists of the delegation of staff from the various ministries and agencies to establish their offices in the same location, frequently a presidential/prime ministerial coordination committee will act as the apex body with the OSS reporting to that body with well-established scorecards and MIS.

Way forward

Whatever the solution the Government has in mind, the existing One-Stop Shop we have according to most investors has now actually turned into a ‘one more stop,’ as investors are now forced to interact with one more entity in the process of implementing their projects. Certainly, it may not be a weakness of the people who the run OSS, it could be the lack of a particularly strong and all-embracing legal mandate.

Well-known examples where such an OSS system works well are the Economic Development Board (EDB) of Singapore, the Malaysian Industrial Development Authority (MIDA) and the Industrial Development Authority (IDA) of Ireland. In all three agencies, investors can rely on the agency to provide practically all the approvals and clearances needed without much of a hassle. All these agencies however have strong support from the Prime Minister.

In the final analysis, the starting point for any effort therefore would be to reform the current Economic Affairs Committee of the Government (a committee structure started during President Premadasa in the late ’80s) and make it more output-driven rather than policy- and approvals-driven and finally fix the structure and get the talent required to reflect the change that is taking place in the economy and in the UNP-SLFP led Government.

(The writer has held senior positions in both public and private sectors.)

Sri Lanka: Krrish seals deal on $650m project

Kriss_Project

The eldest son of the Former President Rajapaksa was recently arrested for misappropriating Rs.70 million given by Krrish as a sponsorship for a rugby tournament organised by the Carlton Sports Network. 

by Charumini de Silva

Courtesy: The Daily Finance Times, Colombo

( July 23, 2016, Colombo, Sri Lanka Guardian) Beleaguered Indian real estate company, Krrish Group has finally sealed the $650 million controversial mixed development project deal, a top Minister said.

The project, which was initiated under the previous Government of former President Mahinda Rajapaksa, drew allegations of pay-offs to politicians and officials to get the project off the ground.

MP Namal Rajapaksa was recently arrested for misappropriating Rs.70 million given by Krrish as a sponsorship for a rugby tournament organised by the Carlton Sports Network.

Krrish announced the project in August 2012, outlining plans to break ground in 2013 and complete the four-tower construction in 2016 but ran into controversy almost immediately over non-payment of dues under deadlines specified in the agreement. But nearly four years on, the company finally seems to be making good on its promises.

“The company had paid the full amount and it is going ahead with the complete project. It is in the final stage now,” International Trade State Minister Sujeewa Senasinghe told theDaily FT. Despite heavily criticising the project while in the Opposition, the Government stopped short of pulling the plug on the project after being elected into power in 2015.

Senasinghe said full payment paves the way for work to begin on the long overdue $650 million mixed development project at a 4.3-acre British heritage site in Colombo Fort.

According to the Minister, the proposal that the Government had received includes 70 floors in two towers. However, according to the initial proposal of the project, it included four high-rise buildings containing a luxury hotel, apartments, malls and office space.

Senasinghe added the firm was now negotiating with new partners such as JW Marriot and Ritz Carlton to manage the property.

When contacted, Board of Investment (BOI) Chairman Upul Jayasuriya said the Cabinet Committee on Economic Management (CEM) had made a decision on this project and was awaiting approval from the Attorney General’s Department.

“Until we receive a response from the Attorney General’s Department, we are unable to comment on the progress of the project,” he said.

The project was first launched as a BOI venture in September 2012, but was stalled in March 2013 after payments for land release was delayed to the Urban Development Authority (UDA).

The company had initially deposited a sum of Rs.499.5 million which accounts for 10% of the total lease premium as a commitment fee on 14 September 2012.

VIDEO:- Kiriella’s deception exposed


FRIDAY, 22 JULY 2016
Minister of Higher Education and Highways Lakshman Kiriella denied in Parliament yesterday (21st) the information forwarded by JVP Parliamentarian Dr. Nalinda Jayathissa that three members of Minister’s Media Secretary’s family had been given three posts of consultants in the Ministry of Highways. The Minister also denied that a Buddhist priest had been appointed as a consultant for the Ministry.
However, we have received the document which states the brother, sister and father of the Media Secretary have been appointed as consultants for the Ministry.
All three of them reside at the same address according to this document. Their names are Savinda Samarasuriya, K.G. Athma Madhuwanthi Peiris and Cyril Samarasuriya and according to the document all three of them reside at No. 106, Aruppala Watta, Kandy.
In addition to the allowance received by the Media Secretary it is revealed that each of his family members receive a sum of Rs. 65,000 making a total of Rs.195000.
Also, the relevant document includes the name of Wattappala Seevali Thero as a consultant a fact which Minister Kiriella denied in Parliament yesterday.
As such, Minister of Higher Education and Highways Lakshman Kiriella who is also the Leader of the House of the Maithri – Ranil Parliament has hoodwinked the Parliament as well as the people in the country.


Agalawatte Plantations PLC Employees Oppose Takeover By Browns Group


Colombo Telegraph
July 22, 2016
With Sri Lanka’s capital market watchdog – the Securities and Exchange Commission (SEC) of Sri Lanka announcing the withholding of sale proceeds of Agalawatte Plantations PLC this week, employee representatives all six estates of Agalawatte Plantation say they will oppose the gaining of effective control by the buyer Browns Group till the SEC clears out the imbroglio.
“Nearly all of Agalawatte Plantations PLC employees from all six estates belonging to the Company oppose the illegal takeover of Agalawatte Plantations PLC since SEC has issued a directive withholding the sale. Officials of Pussellawa Plantations Ltd attempted this week to conduct stocktaking of our factories illegally. All employees including the management opposed their actions stating that SEC had issued a directive withholding the sale and that until Browns Group is given the green light by the regulator to take effective control, we would oppose all action to takeover the management and possession by any illegal means,” Joint Employees Union for the Protection of Agalawatte Plantations PLC Convener Lakshman Kumara told Colombo Telegraph.
black flags have been put up Agalawatte Plantations
According to Kumara black flags have been put up in almost all factories and estates and estate workers have opposed the illegal takeover by burning tyres.
He added that all unions of all six estates belonging to Agalawatte Plantations PLC, namely – Pinkanda , Kiribathgala, Noragalla, Wataptha, Niriella and Doloswala, were on standby to resort to further trade union action in the event they continue their illegal attempts.
On July 20, SEC suspended the sale of 15.2 million shares belonging to Agalawatte Plantations PLC by Dr. Chris Nonis, reportedly without due authorization and approval from shareholders.
Teachers protest






2016-07-22

Ceylon Teachers Union today staged a protest outside the Prime Minister’s Office in Colombo urging the authorities to assign schools to the Principals, who had been given appointments. Pix by Kushan Pathiraja

Armageddon Approaches

German_Russia_Leaders

by Paul Craig Roberts

( July 23, 2016, Washinton DC, Sri Lanka Guardian) The Western pubic doesn’t know it, but Washington and its European vassals are convincing Russia that they are preparing to attack. Eric Zuesse reports on a German newspaper leak of a Bundeswehr decision to declare Russia to be an enemy nation of Germany.

This is the interpretation that some Russian politicians themselves have put on the NATO military bases that Washington is establishing on Russia’s borders.

Washington might intend the military buildup as pressure on President Putin to reduce Russian opposition to Washington’s unilateralism. However, it reminds some outspoken Russians such as Vladimir Zhirinovsky of Hitler’s troops on Russia’s border in 1941.

Zhirinovsky is the founder and leader of Russia’s Liberal Democratic Party and a vice chairman of the Russian parliament. In a confrontation with the editor of a German newspaper, Zhirinovsky tells him that German troops again on Russia’s border will provoke a preventive strike after which nothing will remain of German and NATO troops. “The more NATO soldiers in your territory, the faster you are going to die. To the last man. Remove NATO from your territory!

Russian Foreign Minister Sergey Lavrov has expressed his frustration with Washington’s reliance on force and coercion instead of diplomacy. It is reckless for Washington to convince Russia that diplomacy is a dead end without promise. When the Russians reach that conclusion, force will confront force.

Indeed Zhirinovsky has already reached that point and perhaps Vladimir Putin also. As I reported, Putin recently dressed down Western presstitutes for their role in fomenting nuclear war.

Putin has made it clear that Russia will not accept US missile bases in Poland and Romania. He has informed Washington and the imbecilic Polish and Romanian governments. However, as Putin observed, “they don’t hear.”

The inability to hear means that Washington’s arrogance has made Washington too stupid to take seriously Putin’s warning. If Washington persists, it will provoke the preventive strike that Zhirinovsky told the German editor the Merkel regime was inviting.

Americans need to wake up to the dangerous situation that Washington has created, but I doubt they will. Most wars happen without the public’s knowledge until they happen. The main function of the American left-wing is to serve as a bogyman with which to scare conservatives about the country’s loss of morals, and the main function of conservatives is to create fear and hysteria about immigrants, Muslims, and Russians. There is no sign that Congress is aware of approaching Armageddon, and the media consists of propaganda.

I and a few others try to alert people to the real threats that they face, but our voices are not loud enough. Not even Vladimir Putin’s voice is loud enough. It looks like the West won’t hear until “there remains nothing at all of the German and NATO troops,” and of Poland and Romania and the rest of us.

Friday, July 22, 2016

German police sealed off a shopping center in Munich on Friday after shots were fired, authorities said.(Twitter/Thamina Stoll)

 A shooting rampage in a busy shopping area of Munich left at least eight people dead Friday and sparked a manhunt for as many as three gunmen who reportedly fled the scene after carrying out an act of “suspected terrorism,” authorities said.

Police later reported a ninth fatality and said they were trying to verify whether a gunman committed suicide. No other details were immediately available.

At least 10 people were injured in the attack, the Munich police department said on Twitter more than six hours after the shooting. “Police operations are still running. The situation is still not clear.”
There were no immediate details about the victims of what a police spokesman said“looks like a terrorist attack.”

Much of the southern German city was put on lockdown as police conducted their manhunt. Despite initial reports of multiple attack sites, police could not confirm attacks in any other locations besides the shopping area.

Officials did not immediately specify how the attack unfolded or describe the full scope of the bloodshed at the Olympia shopping complex.

But a senior security official told The Washington Post that four people were killed inside a McDonald’s restaurant and one was fatally shot outside. The official said another victim died at a hospital.
The initial investigation was pointing “in all directions,” police spokesman Marcus de Gloria Martins told reporters in Munich.

German officials said investigators were looking into the possibility that the attack might have been motivated by anti-immigrant sentiments, as well as the prospect that Islamist extremism was behind it. 

Language against foreigners can be heard on a recording from the scene of the shooting, but it was not immediately clear who was speaking. A German television station said a witness told a colleague that the shooter shouted “Bloody foreigners!” at the scene of the McDonald’s attack. There was no immediate confirmation of that account.

German news media reported that police found a body, possibly that of the McDonald’s shooter, about half a mile from the scene and were checking a backpack for explosives.

Hours after the attack, Martins said police were still assuming that “up to three perpetrators” were involved. “We’re definitely not assuming that it’s more than three, but it might also be that it’s fewer than that,” he said.

German police sealed off a shopping center in Munich on Friday after shots were fired, authorities said.
A German intelligence official noted that it was the fifth anniversary of a lone-wolf massacre in Norway that claimed the lives of 77 people. The bomb and gun attacks there were carried out by a right-wing extremist.

A manhunt was launched as helicopters fanned out over the city, and Munich’s transit system was shut down. Residents were asked to stay off the streets.

There was no immediate claim of responsibility for the shootings, but a high-ranking police official told The Post that they appeared likely to be linked to terrorism.

A message posted online in Arabic, apparently from an Islamic State account, said: “Nowhere is safe for all of you. You people have opened the doors of hell by declaring war on us.”

An elite German counterterrorist force was promptly dispatched to Munich to help deal with the situation.
An employee inside the mall, who would give only her first name, Sabiha, said she saw a gunman open fire outside her clothing store. The assailant — described as about 6-foot-1, with black hair and a beard and wearing a black shirt and “some kind of vest” — moved through the corridors before leaving the building, Sabiha told The Washington Post.

Sabiha said she saw at least two people killed and one injured.

“I was lucky because he shot toward the other directions, not mine,” she said, speaking from a hiding spot inside a storage room in the store.

A video clip posted on Twitter showed a gunman opening fire outside a McDonald’s near the shopping complex as people dashed for cover. The man appeared to fire on passersby with a handgun, seemingly at random.

A police statement sent by Twitter urged people near the site to remain in their homes.
A similar announcement was issued by the U.S. Consulate in Munich, which reported “shots fired at multiple locations in Munich.” It advised U.S. citizens to “shelter in place pending police announcements that the situation is under control.”

A later statement issued by the consulate said that “Munich’s main railway station is closed, and mass transit remains halted.”

A U.S. investment adviser and blogger, Eddy Elfenbein, tweeted Friday that his brother was in Munich. “He was helped to safety by a young Syrian immigrant. The young man’s family called from Aleppo to see if he was OK,” Elfenbein wrote.

In Washington, President Obama told a group of law enforcement officers at the White House that the United States is offering German authorities “all the support that they may need in dealing with these circumstances,” which he said remain murky.

He said the Munich attacks serve as a reminder that “our freedoms, our ability to go about our business every day, raising our kids, seeing them grow up and graduate from high school, now about to leave their dad — I’m sorry, I’m getting a little too personal, getting a little too personal there — that depends on law enforcement. It depends on the men and women in uniform every single day who are, under some of the most adverse circumstances imaginable at times, making sure to keep us safe.”

In a separate statement, the White House said the United States “condemns in the strongest terms the apparent terrorist attack that has claimed innocent lives in Munich.” It added: “The resolve of Germany, the United States, and the broader international community will remain unshaken in the face of acts of despicable violence such as this.”

Republican presidential nominee Donald Trump said in a statement: “This cannot continue. The rise of terrorism threatens the way of life for all civilized people, and we must do everything in our power to keep it from our shores.”

The Munich mall is near the city’s Olympic Stadium, the centerpiece of the 1972 Summer Olympic Games that become known for tragedy when Palestinian terrorists took Israeli athletes hostage and killed 11 of them.

Munich is about 40 miles north of Germany’s southern border with Austria, and the city has been deeply affected by a huge influx of refugees sparked by upheaval in the Middle East. More than 1 million asylum seekers arrived in Germany in 2015, and many of them have passed through Munich. About one in seven of the arrivals remain in the city and surrounding region, in the state of Bavaria.
German security forces have been on heightened alert since Monday, when a 17-year-old Afghan armed with a knife and an ax attacked passengers on a commuter train near the Bavarian city of Würzburg. At least five people were injured.

The Islamic State claimed responsibility for the train attack, but German authorities have said there is no evidence of direct links between the teen and the group.

Last month, German authorities arrested three Syrians on suspicion of planning an Islamic State attack on the city of Düsseldorf. The men had entered Germany with a wave of migrants fleeing war and mayhem in the Middle East.

The alleged plot involved suicide bombers, firearms and explosives, German authorities said. The arrests potentially thwarted a deadly operation comparable to assaults on Brussels in March and Paris last November.

Kirchner reported from Berlin and Branigin from Washington. Brian Murphy and Mark Berman in Washington contributed to this report.

Lebanese businesses squeezed as US sanctions hit Hezbollah


Shops, banks, hospitals affected by new US law with many concerned that measures aimed at Shia movement will destabilise wider economy
A bomb blast outside headquarters of Blom Bank in Beirut on 12 June was interpreted by some as retaliatory move by Hezbollah (AFP)

Caroline Topouzoglou- Friday 22 July 2016

Last November, Fadi Serhan, the owner of Vatech, an electronics shop in Beirut, discovered he was being named by the US Treasury as having purchased on behalf of Hezbollah “sensitive technology and equipment” such as “unmanned aerial vehicles (UAVs) and accessories, and various electronic equipment”.

He was placed on a list of ‘procurement agents for Hezbollah’ that barred Americans from doing business with him. Within days, all of his bank accounts were closed.

Then in December, Serhan was on holiday in the Gulf when his friends called him to break the news that he had also been added to a list of 99 entities or companies targeted by the “Hizballah International Financing Prevention Act (HIFPA)”.

The US lists Hezbollah as a terrorist group and accuses it of involvement in numerous anti-US attacks, including the bombings of the US embassy and a Marine barracks in Beirut in 1983 and the hijacking of an American airliner in 1985.

The bill signed by US President Barack Obama in December 2015 went into effect in April this year, and aims to prohibit US individuals and companies from doing business with those named.

Serhan says the news came as a shock.

“I'm not involved in any way with Hezbollah,” he told Middle East Eye. According to Serhan, Banque du Liban, the Lebanese central bank, told him “they don’t have anything against me, but ‘the issue needed to be solved’”.

Efforts to contact US authorities went unanswered. His shop, which he established 20 years ago, is going out of business and he plans to close it by the end of the year.

Banque du Liban promptly closed down all the accounts on the list and regulated the closure of further ones suspected of being affiliated with those targeted by the American sanctions.

“It is obvious that more than 99 accounts were closed, otherwise there wouldn’t be such a hassle concerning the practices of the banking sector,” a Banque du Liban employee, speaking on condition of anonymity, told MEE without giving a precise estimate.

“The account of a colleague of mine, who is the daughter of an ex-member of parliament affiliated to Hezbollah, was closed. The mere fact that this happened shows an exaggerated trend in the banking sector,” he added.

Hezbollah is part of the government in Lebanon and has participated in national elections since 1992.

When asked about how individuals were being chosen beyond those designated by the US government, four of Lebanon’s biggest banks, Bank Audi, Blom Bank, Credit Libanais, and Byblos Bank declined to comment.
But at stake lies their access to dollars, and more broadly, to the international financial system.

Lebanese banks cannot afford to not enforce American regulations in an economy that has been heavily reliant on the dollar to maintain economic stability since the 1975-1990 civil war.

Bassem El Chab, a member of parliament who was commissioned as part of a delegation visiting the US to speak with representatives concerning the repercussions of recent American financial measures on Lebanese businesses, was more forthcoming with his analysis of these events.

“Lebanese banks have been very compliant - overly compliant. Fact is, should any of these banks not be compliant they'd be cut off from the international banking system,” Chab said.

'Pro-American, anti-resistance'

It was rumoured in the Lebanese media that certain banks had become overly zealous in applying American sanctions out of fear of being blacklisted themselves.

“The whole banking sector was criticised [by Hezbollah] for being pro-American, anti-resistance, but ordinary people are weary of this mindset. If the banking sector collapses everyone will suffer,” Chab said.

American officials have taken great pains to make clear that legislation is not specifically aimed at the Shia population.
A US Treasury spokesperson said: “The safety, soundness, and security of the Lebanese financial system is a priority for the United States.”

During a visit in May this year to the US embassy in Beirut, Daniel Glaser, the assistant secretary of the Treasury for terrorist financing, added that “the law does not target Lebanon, nor does it target the Shia community. HIFPA targets Hezbollah’s financial activities worldwide, and will be implemented worldwide”.

At first, Hezbollah leader Hassan Nasrallah responded with speeches criticising the banking system for complying with the American measures and suggesting that Hezbollah supporters could withdraw their money from local banks.

bomb blast outside the headquarters of Blom Bank in Beirut on 12 June was interpreted as a retaliatory move by Hezbollah, prompting worry that the dialogue between financial officials and the Lebanese political party was broken.

However, after the explosion Hezbollah toned down its criticism of the banking sector. When asked to comment on the current implementation of the US law, Hezbollah’s media office said: “Hezbollah is currently negotiating with the central bank and commercial banks as a group. When they are done, Hassan Nasrallah will address the issue of negotiations and their outcome in a speech.”

On Friday, Lebanon's Daily Star newspaper reported that Hezbollah was seeking a truce with the central bank and had reached out to the governor of the bank, Riad Salameh, to thank him for the way in which the bank had handled the US sanctions issue.

Even if it seems like Hezbollah has entered negotiations, many worry that implementation of the law will only further destabilise Lebanon’s economy, which has been hit hard by the war in Syria.

“If you take a look at Lebanon’s economy today, the only sector that’s still kicking is the banking sector. 

Tourism is dead. Real estate is paralysed. Agriculture and industry have no access to international markets because of the war in Syria,” said another Lebanese MP, who was part of the delegation to Washington but asked to remain unidentified.

According to Ali Hamdan, an adviser to Nabih Berry (chairman of the Shia Amal movement and speaker of parliament), many issues are at stake.

“There are some important hospitals in Lebanon that are linked to Hezbollah. They used to deal directly with the government for all financial matters. Now, the Central Bank has to act as an intermediary,” he said.

The main Hezbollah-affiliated hospital, Arrassoul al-Aazam, located in the southern suburbs of Beirut, declined to confirm whether they had financial problems.

The nearby Bahman medical centre, which is affiliated with the al-Mabarrat foundation established by late Shia cleric Sayyed Mohammad Hussein Fadlallah, was quick to clarify that it had not experienced financial problems.

“I can assure you that our accounts are running fine,” said its director, Ali Krayem.

While the al-Mabarrat foundation is not on the OFAC list, in May it told the Reuters news agency that some of its accounts had been frozen by Lebanese banks.

“The problem is the same for Hezbollah municipalities,” said Ali Hamdan. “Will people be sanctioned for paying their taxes?” he said, before adding that the central bank had managed to find a solution for that problem, but had yet to present it publically.

Cash only

What mostly worries Hamdan is the development of a parallel economy.

“It will not benefit anyone to encourage the development of a cash economy in Lebanon. Nobody wants to support terrorism and Lebanon suffers from it. But [the way the Americans are going about it] is comparable to me trying to shoo a fly off your face by hitting you with a heavy ashtray.”
Fadi Serhan’s shop has operated only in cash since November.

But Lebanese economist and former finance minister Georges Corm is less alarmist.

“This law cannot impact the banking sector. The Lebanese diaspora will continue to transfer money into the country,” he said.

Lebanon’s economy is heavily reliant on remittances sent from almost 14 million citizens around the world. However, the level of remittances have been decreasing: According to the World Bank, in 2015 the amount totalled $7.2bn, down from $7.4bn in 2014.

While the fall has been mostly attributed to a sluggish world economy, some fear that the sanctions will exacerbate the issue.

“Remittances are already affected by the American sanctions. It’s getting increasingly complicated to send money in and out of Lebanon now,” said Hamdan.

For Corm however, the real issue at hand is that the law will not meet its end goal, which is to weaken and isolate Hezbollah.

“It’s not by sanctioning Hezbollah financially that they will disappear. They are cooperating with the Lebanese army on preserving the safety of the country,” he said.

Instead, to weaken Hezbollah without damaging the economy, he suggested focusing on maintaining stability within the country.

Hezbollah’s popularity spiked during its 2006 war with Israel, despite the widespread damage caused by the conflict, and Corm said a lack of security remained key to the group’s enduring influence.

“As long as the environment of Lebanon remains so dangerous, support for Hezbollah among large parts of the Lebanese population, both Christian and Muslim, will remain.”

Indian Air Force plane with 29 on board missing in Bay of Bengal

REPRESENTATIVE PHOTO: A soldier stands guard as an Indian Air Force AN-32 transport aircraft carrying security personnel takes-off from the technical airport in Jammu February 9, 2008. REUTERS/Amit Gupta/Files
REPRESENTATIVE PHOTO: A soldier stands guard as an Indian Air Force AN-32 transport aircraft carrying security personnel takes-off from the technical airport in Jammu February 9, 2008.REUTERS/AMIT GUPTA/FILES

BY SANJEEV MIGLANI AND EUAN ROCHA- Fri Jul 22, 2016


An Indian Air Force plane carrying 29 people went missing on Friday on a flight to a remote island chain in the Bay of Bengal, the Defence Ministry said.

The Russian-made AN-32 was on its way to Port Blair, the capital of Andaman and Nicobar islands, from Chennai when it disappeared from radar.

Military officials said the weather had been rough in the Bay of Bengal for the last two days during the monsoon season.

The aircraft was last detected on radar 151 nautical miles east of Chennai, making a left turn with a rapid loss of height from 23,000 ft, according to a note provided by the air force to the Defence Ministry.
There were 21 military personnel on board including six crew. The other people on board were civilians, some family members of soldiers deployed on the islands.

"It was a routine courier mission to Port Blair, the plane was airborne at 8:30 a.m. and due to land at 11:30," air force spokesman Wing Commander Anupam Banerjee said. It had fuel to fly for four hours and 15 minutes.

The plane was overhauled and went through an upgrade in September 2015, according to the note given to the ministry.

The plane had reported three snags this month, according to the note - a pressure leak from the port door, a hydraulic leak and sluggish throttle movement.

The defence ministry said four surveillance planes, 12 ships and a submarine were searching for the aircraft in one of India's largest search and rescue operations in recent years.

India has been beefing up its military presence in the Andamans, 750 nautical miles from mainland India, in recent years.

The islands are near the Malacca Straits, one of the world's busiest shipping lanes which link the Indian Ocean to the South China Sea and East Asia.

The defence ministry said the submarine had been deployed to locate transmissions from an emergency locator beacon on the aircraft. The AN-32 is a workhorse of the air force, chosen for its ability to operate from short runways.

The air force has 101 of the AN-32s that entered service in 1984 and have gone through mid-life upgrades and life extensions since then.

(Editing by Robert Birsel and Janet Lawrence)

Atlanta mayor rejects demand to end Israel police training


Rania Khalek-21 July 2016

Atlanta Mayor Kasim Reed rejected a demand from groups affiliated with the movement for Black lives to halt Israel’s training relationship with local police departments.

Following a resurgence of street protests over the gruesome police slayings of Alton Sterling and Philando Castile, two Black men killed on film in Louisiana and Minnesota, Reed held a meeting with a collective of protesters calling themselves #ATLisREADY to discuss their list of demands.

The first demand calls for “a complete overhaul of Atlanta Police Department’s (APD) training institutions,” including “a termination to APD’s involvement in the Georgia International Law Enforcement Exchange (GILEE) program, that trains our officers in Apartheid Israel.”

“The best counterterrorism techniques in the world”

“There was a demand that I stop allowing the Atlanta Police Department to train with the Israeli police department,” Mayor Reed acknowledged at a press conference (video above). “I’m not going to do that,” he told reporters.

“I happen to believe that the Israeli police department has some of the best counterterrorism techniques in the world,” Reed insisted. “And it benefits our police department from that longstanding relationship.”

It was an interesting choice of words considering that Israeli, Palestinian and international human rights organizations, as well as the UN, have repeatedly condemned Israeli forces, including the police, for a range of human rights violations, particularly for their frequent extrajudicial executions of Palestinians.
It was also recently revealed that Israeli police are authorized to use lethal force as a first resort against Palestinians they suspect might throw rocks, including minors.

An internal police report exposed by the Tel Aviv newspaper Haaretz this month, revealed that Israeli Border Police in Jerusalem “deliberately provoke Palestinians” in order to get a violent response.
One such manufactured provocation in Issawiyeh, in January, led to a confrontation in which Israeli forces shot 12-year-old Ahmad Abu Hummus in the head, causing severe brain damage.

Reed’s office did not respond to The Electronic Intifada’s inquiries about how Atlanta police benefit from training with forces who are effectively authorized to summarily execute children.

Mimicking Israel

The Atlanta Police Department has been sending personnel to Israel since 1992, as part of the Georgia International Law Enforcement Exchange.

GILEE, a project of Georgia State University’s Andrew Young School of Policy Studies, sends high-ranking public safety officials to Israel for “counterterrorism” training every year.

It also brings Israeli police to Georgia to receive training from local police departments in drug war tactics that largely target and devastate poor Black and brown communities.

Atlanta’s deputy police chief Joseph Spillane participated in a two-week training mission to Israel in June 2015. The costs were paid by GILEE, according to records released under a freedom of information request.

Personnel from Georgia police agencies participate in a GILEE training mission to Israel in June 2015. (via Facebook)

After his return, Spillane told WABE public radio that the Atlanta Police Leadership Institute is “modeled on the Israeli model.”

He also revealed that Atlanta’s system for 24-hour camera surveillance of neighborhoods and public spaces “mimicked” an operations center Israel has installed in Jerusalem. Spillane acknowledged that many Israeli cameras are set up to “secure the fence lines” – in other words an integral part of Israel’s occupation and system of forced segregation in the city.

The deputy chief implicitly compared Israel’s context of military occupation to policing Atlanta. “They have a very diverse population of Christians, Arabs and Jews living in the same space, and so they have similar problems with diversity as we have here,” Spillane said.

Notwithstanding the mountain of evidence to the contrary from human rights groups, Spillane praised his Israeli peers for being “self-restrained as far as how far they go in regards to human rights, and the rights of the people they may be investigating.”

GILEE was founded by Robert Friedmann, an Israeli-American academic and anti-Palestinian activist who uses his influence with US law enforcement to promote Israel’s discriminatory policing strategies.

Speaking at a recent American Jewish Committee event, he justified Islamophobia. According to Mondoweiss, he told the audience, “There is no Islamophobia. There is knife-o-phobia.”

Friedmann also equates the nonviolent Palestinian-led boycott of Israeli institutions complicit in human rights violations against Palestinians with terrorism.

Cheering Gaza attack

None of this seems to matter to Mayor Reed, a politician who has demonstrated more interest in advancing his own career than in promoting social justice.

As a staunch Hillary Clinton supporter, Reed published a column at CNN celebrating Clinton and hammering her rival for the Democratic presidential nomination, Bernie Sanders, on the issue of gun control.

The Intercept’s Lee Fang later revealed that Reed’s column was actually written by a corporate lobbyist with guidance from Correct the Record, a pro-Clinton super PAC.
Reed is similarly supportive of Israel.

At an Atlanta rally in 2014, Reed joined Israeli government officials to cheer Israel’s massive military assault on the besieged Gaza Strip that summer, which killed at least 551 children.

Reed led a cyber technology delegation to Israel in April 2015, where he championed closer business ties between Georgia and Israel’s technology sector.

Law and order

Of course Georgia’s police are hardly alone in training with Israel.

Under the cover of counterterrorism training, hundreds of US police departments have sent high-ranking officials to Israel for lessons in domination and population control.

These training programs have at least two objectives.

First, they seek to reframe Israel’s violent occupation and colonization of Palestinian land as a campaign of law and order that US law enforcement should emulate.

Such a narrative positions Palestinians not as an occupied, dispossessed and stateless people whose rights must be restored, but as a pathologically dangerous population that must be controlled and pacified with brute force. US police then take home “lessons” to apply in US cities.

No less important, the junkets serve as a marketing exercise for Israel’s multi-billion dollar “homeland security” industry.

Though police militarization has been a topic of widespread debate since the Ferguson uprising in the summer of 2014, Israel’s influence on US law enforcement remains virtually ignored by US media outlets while some, like Politifact, even deny that a significant training relationship exists.

Former Israeli prison guard and writer for The Atlantic Jeffrey Goldberg suggested that those highlighting the issue are really just anti-Semites trying to pin the blame for US police violence on Jews.

It is of course important not to claim that US police violence and institutional racism would not exist without Israel. Rather, the issue is that Israel sees opportunities to market and repackage its own repressive, racist and violent techniques tested and developed against Palestinians under occupation as “smart” and legitimate technologies for US authorities to use from inner cities to the US-Mexico border.
And this Israeli pitch has been embraced by US leaders, from mayors like Reed to the administration of President Barack Obama.

Bringing the repression home

And various movements against police brutality are taking notice of the relationship. After all, there are plenty of concrete examples of US police applying Israeli tactics to their own jurisdictions.

In Washington, DC, for instance, police adopted the Israeli tactic of keeping the red and blue lights on their cruisers flashing at all times so that their presence is always felt, particularly in poor Black neighborhoods.

The NYPD’s Demographic Unit that used to systematically spy on Muslims, was modeled in part on how Israeli authorities operate in the occupied West Bank.

Three months after the Ferguson uprising, the St. Louis Police Department, which has participated in training sessions in Israel, started stockpiling skunk water, a foul-smelling liquid developed by Israel to break up anti-occupation protests and harass Palestinian communities.

The substance emits a foul stench that has been described as a mix of rotting animal corpse, raw sewage and feces. The odor sticks to walls, clothing, hair and skin for days and is impossible to wash away – Israeli forces frequently spray it indiscriminately into Palestinian homes.

Skunk water hasn’t been used on US soil yet. But police departments around the country have expressed interest in acquiring it to quell demonstrations against police violence. Perhaps this is one of the counterterrorism tactics Reed had in mind when praising Israeli police.

Additional research by Ali Abunimah